Chapter 1
 âWhy?â â
Valedictorian of Korea University.
Top scorer in the national bar exam.
Youngest legal advisor at Child Law Firm.
A win rate of 95.85%.
Yet none of that could protect No Hyung-jin.
At this moment, the only thing he could feel was the knife handle sticking out of his chest.
âCough!â
âThatâs what happens when you donât know when to stop.â
Hyung-jin looked up at the man looming over him. Through his fading vision, he could still make out the sneer twisting the manâs face.
âWhyâŠ?â
âYou already know the answer to that, donât you?â
More blood spurted from his mouth instead of words. He wished some of it would stain the other manâleave a trace, some evidenceâbut the raincoat he wore blocked even that.
Everything was wrapped in plastic: the walls, the floor, and the men wearing vinyl suits. A perfectly prepared trap.
âThis isnât America,â the man said with a cold smile.
âIf you wanted to play the righteous hero, you shouldâve gone there. Not here.â
âAhâŠâ
He had been invited by prestigious U.S. law firms, but he stayed in Korea. He wanted to defend justice in his homeland.
But this time, heâd gone up against the wrong people.
âDu-hanâs peopleâŠâ
Du-han Groupâone of Koreaâs three major conglomerates, tied by marriage to the current presidentâs family.
It all began when their illegal dumping of chemical waste was exposed. Over ten thousand victims, two trillion won in damagesâthe largest lawsuit in Korean history.
But because Du-han was not just a conglomerate but also the presidentâs in-laws, no one dared to take the case. No one except No Hyung-jin.
And this was the result.
âIsnât the National Intelligence Service supposed to protect the nation?â
If the man who stabbed him had been a gangster or a hired killer, he might have understood. But an active NIS agent? That was something he couldnât believe.
âYouâre mistaken about something,â the man whispered into Hyung-jinâs fading ear.
âWe donât protect the nation. We protect His Excellency.â
Then he twisted the knife.
âCough!â
With a violent spray of blood, No Hyung-jin took his last breath.
The man stared at his lifeless body for a moment, then nodded.
âGet rid of it.â
The others moved quickly, lifting his corpse into a steel drum and pouring hydrochloric acid over it.
All that remained of No Hyung-jin was not his great achievements or his reputationâ
but a handful of blood dissolving in acid.
âNot your time to die,â a deep voice murmured.
The black-robed reaper shook his head as he stared at the dazed spirit.
âThis one wasnât supposed to die.â
There have always been unexpected deathsâso-called wrongful deaths. But when someone dies who shouldnât, it becomes a problem.
âLord Yama, what should we do?â
âThis is troublesome.â
Normally, the solution would be to send the person backâlet them miraculously survive.
But in this case, even that was impossible. His body had been reduced to liquid.
âIf heâs gone, itâll cause bigger problems.â
âI know. Thatâs why this is serious⊠tsk.â
The corruption of the mortal world had reached its peak. Hell was overflowing, bursting at the seams.
Heâd been sent down to correct the balance, but he hadnât even begun before dying like this.
âI need to send him back somehowâŠâ
But to send him back, he needed a bodyâand there was none. Yet leaving things as they were would only lead to more unjust deaths.
When resentment piles high enough to touch the heavens, it brings about apocalypse.
A war, a cataclysm, a natural disasterâwhatever form it takes, billions would die.
âThe gods wonât just stand by,â a lesser reaper warned.
âHmmâŠâ
The gods had already declared their intent to destroy and remake the world.
But the Jade Emperor had begged them to give humanity one last chance.
That chance was No Hyung-jin.
And now he was dead.
âIâll have to bend the rules.â
âYou mean⊠reverse time?â
âWhat else can I do? He has no body left.â
âThe gods wonât be pleased.â
âIâll take that risk.â
He already knew some of the gods would look the other way. Not all of them wanted the world destroyed.
âEven if you turn back time, heâll just die again if nothing changes.â
âThen Iâll give him enough power to protect his own life.â
âPower to protect his life?â
He wanted to grant him divine strengthâenough to reshape the worldâbut that much power could cause another apocalypse.
He had to limit it.
âLetâs hope he survives this time,â Lord Yama murmured, looking at No Hyung-jinâs wandering soul.
âUgh!â
Hyung-jin jerked awakeâthen immediately hit his head hard and fell backward.
âIdiot,â said a girlâs voice.
He looked up to see a young woman peeking down from the top bunk bed.
âItâs been over a month since we bought that bed, and you still havenât gotten used to it?â
â…Noona?â
âAt least you didnât lose your memory from the shock.â
âYouâre⊠alive?â
His sister, No Hyun-ah, frowned.
âDo you want to die? Iâve been alive and well for seventeen years!â
âSeventeenâŠ?â
âYeah, seventeen. Born and raised right here in Korea, genius.â
He stared at her in confusion. She looked about seventeenâ
and that made no sense.
âGet your head together and go to sleep,â she said, disappearing back into the top bunk.
Hyung-jin sat frozen for a moment before lying down again.
âWaitâŠâ
His memories began piecing themselves together: the past, his studies, historyâ
and his death.
âWas it all a dream?â
But it was too vivid. He could still feel the knife buried in his chest.
âWhat the hell is going on?â
He couldnât sleep.
âIâm off!â
His sister dashed out of the house, biting into a slice of bread.
Hyung-jin trudged out behind her.
âIf youâre late, thatâs your problem,â she called.
He looked down at his uniform.
âMiddle school?â
He was a second-year middle schooler. In his memories, that time had long since passed.
âSo that makes Noona seventeen⊠first year of high school.â
He couldnât remember every morning of his childhood, but the big thingsâthose, he remembered.
âWhat happened to me?â
He had definitely died. Yet here he was, back in the pastâand his sister was alive.
His eyes stung.
Her life had been tragic. The boyfriend she met in high school became her husband,
but he was a terrible man. After two children and a painful divorce, she struggled alone. Then, a tragic accident took her kids away.
She left Korea soon after, moving to Japan, saying she wanted a quiet life.
Then came the tsunami. Her body was never found.
âWait⊠that meansâŠâ
If his memory was right, this was about the time she first met that guyâthe so-called delinquent with the good looks and bad reputation. The one every high school girl fell for.
âNo way⊠this has to be a dream.â
It had to be. But the unease twisting in his gut said otherwise.
Because if she met him again⊠her life would spiral into hell.
âIs this a dream? Or was my old life the dream?â
He didnât know.
âI have to check.â
So instead of heading to school, he changed directionâ
doing something he had never once done before.
âHa-ha! Nice shot!â
âDamn it!â
Across the basketball court, a boy was playing energetically, sweating under the sun.
Cho Hyuk-woo.
His brother-in-law. His nemesis.
The same man who would one day marry his sister, cheat on her with countless women,
lie about being single, and blow through their savings paying settlements.
A human piece of trash.
But right now, he looked perfectly normalâa handsome, athletic student.
âHeâs⊠real?â
If this was a dream, that guy shouldnât exist.
He shouldnât have met him until years later, when his sister brought him home to âintroduce her boyfriend.â
And yet here he was.
âMaybe this isnât a dream after all.â
Every memory felt real.
âDream or not,â Hyung-jin muttered, staring at him,
âIâll make sure she stays away from that bastard.â
He didnât know which world was the dream anymoreâ
but he knew one thing for certain:
He would not let that man near his sister again.